) The objective of this program is to attract highly qualified medical students to careers in translational/clinical cancer research. The program will accomplish this objective by providing summer research opportunities in active, ongoing, and contemporary biomedical research laboratories whose research focus is the transfer of information from the laboratory to treatment of the patient. The program aims to stress the notion that it is possible to have a meaningful, rewarding career doing clinically relevant cancer research by matching medical students with a core faculty which consists predominantly of clinical scientists. Furthermore, the core faculty have been carefully selected to reflect the breadth of clinically relevant cancer research so as to make clear that cancer research is not limited strictly to the research bench. Student participants in the program will attend meetings of relevant Clinical Research Groups, and will be encouraged to make rounds with their preceptors. This emphasis on the patient as the focus of the research activity sets this program apart from traditional training programs that focus more on the cellular and molecular aspects of cancer. Such focus, and the careful selection of faculty who are excellent clinical scientist role models, is designed to entice exceptional students into a career in clinical cancer research. Specifically, the program will aim to: (A) permit student participants to develop insight into the process by which results from the research laboratory are translated into diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to cancer, (B) provide initial experience in the design and execution of experiments that validate the potential of diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to cancer, (C) foster constructive views as to the role of clinical scientists in an academic research center, (D) enhance the perception that the clinical scientist plays in meaningful and rewarding role in the development and application of findings from the cancer research laboratory to the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of cancer, (E) Bring student participants into regular contact with role models who are enthusiastic about research in cancer, and (F) underscore the importance of the role of the physician as an intermediary between the basic science research laboratory and the clinic.
This aim i s to reinforce the notion that the physician who understands research can best translate it into the problems of patient care, can formulate and test hypotheses, and is more likely to provide ideas for further investigation.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Education Projects (R25)
Project #
5R25CA069277-02
Application #
2748822
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Program Officer
Agelli, Maria
Project Start
1997-08-01
Project End
2002-07-31
Budget Start
1998-08-01
Budget End
1999-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Thomas Jefferson University
Department
Pharmacology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
061197161
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19107
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